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Published February 10, 2017 | Submitted + Published
Journal Article Open

Subaru/SCExAO First-light Direct Imaging of a Young Debris Disk around HD 36546

Abstract

We present H-band scattered light imaging of a bright debris disk around the A0 star HD 36546 obtained from the Subaru Coronagraphic Extreme Adaptive Optics (SCExAO) system with data recorded by the HiCIAO camera using the vector vortex coronagraph. SCExAO traces the disk from r ~ 0."3 to r ~ 1'' (34–114 au). The disk is oriented in a near east–west direction (PA ~ 75°), is inclined by i ~ 70°–75°, and is strongly forward-scattering (g > 0.5). It is an extended disk rather than a sharp ring; a second, diffuse dust population extends from the disk's eastern side. While HD 36546 intrinsic properties are consistent with a wide age range (t ~ 1–250 Myr), its kinematics and analysis of coeval stars suggest a young age (3–10 Myr) and a possible connection to Taurus-Auriga's star formation history. SCExAO's planet-to-star contrast ratios are comparable to the first-light Gemini Planet Imager contrasts; for an age of 10 Myr, we rule out planets with masses comparable to HR 8799 b beyond a projected separation of 23 au. A massive icy planetesimal disk or an unseen super-Jovian planet at r > 20 au may explain the disk's visibility. The HD 36546 debris disk may be the youngest debris disk yet imaged, is the first newly identified object from the now-operational SCExAO extreme AO system, is ideally suited for spectroscopic follow-up with SCExAO/CHARIS in 2017, and may be a key probe of icy planet formation and planet–disk interactions.

Additional Information

© 2017 The American Astronomical Society. Received 2016 December 20; revised 2017 January 10; accepted 2017 January 10; published 2017 February 10. We thank Eric Mamajek for detailed discussions on HD 36546's age and Kevin Luhman, Scott Kenyon, Mengshu Xu, and the anonymous referee for other helpful comments. We wish to emphasize the pivotal cultural role and reverence that the summit of Maunakea has always had within the indigenous Hawaiian community. We are most fortunate to have the privilege to conduct scientific observations from this mountain.

Attached Files

Published - Currie_2017_ApJL_836_L15.pdf

Submitted - 1701.02314.pdf

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